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Published June 10, 2021 | Submitted + Published
Journal Article Open

Continued Radio Observations of GW170817 3.5 yr Post-merger

Abstract

We present new radio observations of the binary neutron star merger GW170817 carried out with the Karl G. Jansky Very large Array (VLA) more than 3 yr after the merger. Our combined data set is derived by coadding more than ≈32 hr of VLA time on-source, and as such provides the deepest combined observation (rms sensitivity ≈0.99 μJy) of the GW170817 field obtained to date at 3 GHz. We find no evidence for a late-time radio rebrightening at a mean epoch of t ≈ 1200 days since merger, in contrast to a ≈2.1σ excess observed at X-ray wavelengths at the same mean epoch. Our measurements agree with expectations from the post-peak decay of the radio afterglow of the GW170817 structured jet. Using these results, we constrain the parameter space of models that predict a late-time radio rebrightening possibly arising from the high-velocity tail of the GW170817 kilonova ejecta, which would dominate the radio and X-ray emission years after the merger (once the structured jet afterglow fades below detection level). Our results point to a steep energy-speed distribution of the kilonova ejecta (with energy-velocity power-law index α ≳ 5). We suggest possible implications of our radio analysis, when combined with the recent tentative evidence for a late-time rebrightening in the X-rays, and highlight the need for continued radio-to-X-ray monitoring to test different scenarios.

Additional Information

© 2021. The American Astronomical Society. Received 2021 March 7; revised 2021 April 21; accepted 2021 April 30; published 2021 June 10. We are grateful to Dale A. Frail for contributing to shaping this work with many insightful discussions. A.B. and A.C. acknowledge support from the National Science Foundation via Award #1907975. K.P.M. and G.H. acknowledge support from the National Science Foundation grant AST-1911199. D.L.K. was supported by NSF grant AST-1816492. D.L. acknowledges support from the National Science Foundation via Award #1907955. The National Radio Astronomy Observatory is a facility of the National Science Foundation operated under cooperative agreement by Associated Universities, Inc.

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Published - Balasubramanian_2021_ApJL_914_L20.pdf

Submitted - 2103.04821.pdf

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Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023